Monday, 14 January 2013

My first article of the year is about Quick Sequence Diagram Editor (sdedit), a tool for creating UML sequence diagrams from textual descriptions of objects and messages that follow a really easy syntax. The ones who follow my blog will realise that I love logging details for my applications and with this component you will be able to create a nice sequence diagram from any of your real business scenarios. I have been dealing lately with loads of different multi-threaded applications and it was when doing some of my homework for Uni when I found this marvellous gem.
I have written a small and quite straight-forward wrapper in Delphi which will help you to generate the ".sdx" file and run the converter calling the library via java command. All the source code and examples can be found in my personal repository on Google code: thundax-delphi-personal-repository where I keep all my tests and things I want to try out.
With few easy callings, you can instantiate the TUML class and use "start" and "call" methods to generate things like this:

More complex example:

It is really useful when doing reports or to display any of your business scenarios in a nice way. One of my tasks was to create a small application which would send messages across different instances in a supercomputer and this is the best way I found to really present what was going on in there. You can generate huge diagrams and sdedit will cope with it.

Here is the piece of code for the wrapper:

And this is a more realistic approach, where we can have for example 3 different threads which will perform different operations at a different times. All of them are asynchronous and they use the TUML class to show how long every thread took to finish its processing.

Example:

A more realistic approach (Output):

I hope you find this article interesting enough to catch you attention as it is always good when finding tools like this an that are easy enough to integrate with any language and with great results.

About the Author

I am a full stack Software Architect and I consider myself a problem solver with the ability of getting things to work. Having a keen eye on quality, architecture and risks this lets me build good software. I am mainly interested in Delphi, .NET, Databases, AI, compilers, grammars, graphics and more mathematical stuff. If you like this page you could also visit me on twitter @thunderjordi and on Facebook.